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Home > Christmas Stories
It Was the Same Christmas Morning
A Christmas Story for Girls
Continued from Page 2
"You may go, Celeste," said Ethel with a dignity not
unlike her mother's manner.
The maid shrugged her shoulders again, left the room and closed the door.
Everything was lovely, everything was there except that personal touch
which means so much even to the littlest girl. Ethel was used to being
cared for by others than her parents but it came especially hard on her
this morning. She turned, leaving the beautiful things as they were placed
about the tree, and walked to the end window whence she could get a view
of the little house beyond the garage over the back wall.
There was a Christmas tree in Maggie's house too. It wouldn't have made a
respectable branch for Ethel's tree, and the trimmings were so cheap and
poor that Celeste would have thrown them into the waste basket
immediately. There were a few common, cheap, perishable little toys around
the tree on the floor but to Maggie it was a glimpse of heaven. She stood
in her little white night-gown—no such thing as dressing for her on
Christmas morning—staring around her. The whole family was grouped about
her, even the littlest brothers, who went to school because they were not
big enough to work, forgot their own joy in watching their little sister.
Her father, her mother, the big boys all in a state of more or less
dishevelled undress stood around her, pointing out first one thing and
then another which they had been able to get for her by denying themselves
some of the necessities of life. Maggie was so happy that her eyes
brimmed, yet she did not cry. She laughed, she clapped her hands, and
kissed them all round and finally found herself, a big orange in one hand,
a tin trumpet in the other, perched upon her father's broad shoulders
leading a frantic march around the narrow confines of the living-room. As
she passed by the one window she caught a glimpse of the alley. It had
been snowing throughout the night and the ground was white.
"Oh," she screamed with delight, "let me see the snow on Christmas
morning."
Her father walked over to the window, parted the cheap lace curtains,
while Maggie clapped her hands gleefully at the prospect. Presently she
lifted her eyes and looked toward the other window high up in the air,
where Ethel stood, a mournful little figure. Maggie's papa looked too. He
knew how cheap and poor were the little gifts he had bought for his
daughter.
"I wish," he thought, "that she could have some of the things that child
up there has."
Maggie however was quite content. She smiled, flourished her trumpet,
waved her orange, but there was no answering smile on Ethel's face now.
Finally the wistful little girl in the big house languidly waved her hand,
and then Maggie was taken away to be dressed lest she should catch cold
after the mischief was done.
"I hope that she's having a nice Christmas," said Maggie, referring to
Ethel.
"I hope so too," answered her mother, wishing that her little girl might
have some of the beautiful gifts she knew must be in the great house.
"Whatever she has," said Maggie, gleefully, "she can't have any nicer
Christmas than I have, that you and papa and the boys gave me. I'm just as
happy as I can be."
Over in the big house, Ethel was also wishing. She was so unhappy since
she had seen Maggie in the arms of her big, bearded father, standing by
the window, that she could control herself no longer. She turned away and
threw herself down on the floor in front of the tree and buried her face
in her hands bursting into tears.
It was Christmas morning and she was all alone.
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